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Maybe you first noticed it when Garrison Brooks converted an and-one with 2:57 remaining in the first half and watched as he roared to the crowd in a way that made former Tar Heel All-American Brice Johnson proud. Or maybe you noticed it a play later, when the sophomore forward soared and converted an alley-oop, jamming the ball down through the basket in a way that hadn't been done by a Tar Heel since Brice Johnson last did so against Villanova in the 2016 National Championship game.

Maybe you noticed it at halftime, when UNC's leading scorer was Brooks with 13 points and four rebounds on 6-10 shooting from the field.

"I jumped on everybody but him at halftime because in the first half we took really bad shots," head coach Roy Williams said. "Luke made one 3 that was really a good shot and another one he made wasn't a very good shot. But Garrison kept us in the game in the first half with his inside play."

Just less than three minutes later, Brooks scored again, this time on a layup to stymie a 6-0 Wofford run and hush the Terrier crowd.

It was clear the Terriers noticed Brooks' play. On three separate occasions at the beginning of the second half, a Wofford defender picked off a pass intended for Brooks. But even with the defensive strategy in mind to limit the big man's touches, Brooks continued to make his presence felt with seven points after intermission.

Brooks wasn't the only Tar Heel leaving his mark. Graduate transfer Cameron Johnson, who struggled to the tune of a 1-5 shooting performance in last year's loss to Wofford, led all UNC players with five made 3-pointers.

But it was Brooks who stole the show. Channeling his inner Brice Johnson once again, Brooks threw down an emphatic dunk on a pass from Johnson with 6:49 left in the second half to put his team up by double-digits for the first time since the opening minutes of the second half. After scoring, he yelled at the disheartened crowd, while managing to talk trash to a Wofford player on his way back down the court.

Brooks put an exclamation point on the night just two minutes later, soaring high in the air to drop in a layup, while drawing the foul to make it a 64-57 lead before converting the free throw. As he returned to the floor, he flexed his muscles and let out a roar, signaling his arrival as the big man the Tar Heels sorely missed last season.

"We give Garrison that a lot, him looking like Brice and acting like Brice," senior guard Kenny Williams said with a laugh. "Man, I was proud of Garrison. He's probably the one that I've been on the most this preseason just because I kind of took him under my wing a little bit and just demanded more from him and he showed that tonight. I'm so proud of him the way he played."

Perhaps Kenny Williams lit a fire under Brooks with his demanding in preseason the same way Roy Williams lit a fire under Brice Johnson.

If that was the case, it certainly worked because it was Brooks who provided the energy and scoring in the first half to keep his team ahead. It was Brooks who ended the game with career bests in points (20), minutes played (25) and field goals made (9).

It was Brooks who was a key reason for the Tar Heels taming the Terriers to start the new season.